Blue Jays’ Gausman ejected after gruelling 53-pitch inning

Kevin Gausman was cruising against the New York Yankees on Sunday, until he wasn’t. The Toronto Blue Jays starter was ejected by home plate umpire Chris Conroy after tying a team record by throwing 53 pitches in the third inning at Yankee Stadium.

Apr 27, 2025 - 23:09
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Blue Jays’ Gausman ejected after gruelling 53-pitch inning

Kevin Gausman was cruising against the New York Yankees on Sunday, until he wasn’t.

The Toronto Blue Jays starter was ejected by home plate umpire Chris Conroy after tying a team record by throwing 53 pitches in the third inning at Yankee Stadium.

Gausman needed only 18 pitches to set down six of the first seven batters he faced, but was then tagged for six runs after walking five and allowing two hits, as what started as a stellar outing unravelled.

The former all-star and Cy Young finalist was a strike away from getting out of a bases-loaded jam, but Austin Wells worked the count back full before lining an outside fastball for a three-run double. Gausman was promptly pulled by Blue Jays manager John Schneider.

The star right-hander was visibly unhappy with a number of Conroy’s ball-strike calls throughout his final inning, and let the home plate umpire know as he exited towards the visitors’ dugout, resulting in an inconsequential ejection, as Gausman had already been removed from the game.

“I think there was probably at least three pitches that inning that I know were strikes,” Gausman said post-game. “The more frustrating thing was watching what (Max) Fried was getting. He’s getting pitches down, so, if you’re not calling it for me, why are you gonna call it for him?”

Schneider was ejected two innings later for arguing a strike call on Vladimir Guerrero Jr. two pitches into the fifth.

Gausman and Conroy first engaged in a heated exchange to start the inning when a fastball that appeared to catch the zone at Oswaldo Cabrera’s knees was called a ball.

As Gausman left the field, he slipped down the steps in the Blue Jays dugout.

“As I was coming off the mound, I told him I was going to watch his bad umpiring inside,” Gausman said of the slip. “Didn’t see the stairs.”

The 53 pitches tied Woody Williams for the franchise record, who threw his marathon inning in 1998.

It was an uncharacteristic collapse for Gausman, who had pitched to a 3.61 ERA and 0.82 WHIP with 26 strikeouts and six walks over 31.1 innings to start the season.

“You try to get to 100 pitches, you throw 50 of them in one inning, it’s pretty crazy. I don’t think I’ve ever been close to that,” Gausman said when asked how the lengthy frame felt physically. “So, not ideal. Your stuff is definitely going to waver at that point.”

Gausman’s four-seam fastball velocity fluctuated between 89 and 96 m.p.h. as he lost command of his arsenal, also often missing arm side with his splitter. He opened the outing by throwing nine consecutive fastballs, and threw the pitch 67 per cent of the time compared to his season average of 54 per cent.